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Museum Studies Program, Museums at Noon

Do We Need to Decolonize Holocaust Museums?
Friday, April 17, 2026
12:00-1:00 PM
Hatcher Library Gallery Lab (Room 100H) Hatcher Graduate Library Map
A central issue animating and transforming the museum sector today is the call to decolonize. This appeal began with Indigenous activists, whose communities have been overwhelmingly hurt by the museum sector’s history and status quo. Museums of mass violence – Holocaust museums, paradigmatic among them – have been largely exempt from decolonial critiques. As products of 20th and 21st-century social justice mandates and often created at the behest of survivor communities, they seem at first glance not to be obvious targets for such scrutiny. Yet, Holocaust museums are not free from entanglements with state power nor from inherited traditions and infrastructures of museum practice with their attendant biases, exclusions, and silences. This talk explores the potential value of decolonial museum theories and practices for Holocaust museums to renew and expand their social justice mandates.

Presentation by Erica Lehrer, PhD, MSP04; Professor of History at Concordia University (Montreal, Canada); Winter 2026 Institute Fellow, UM Frankel Institute for Advanced Judaic Studies
Building: Hatcher Graduate Library
Website:
Event Type: Presentation
Tags: Crees, Frankel Center For Judaic Studies, Holocaust, Judaic, Judaic Studies, Museum
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Museum Studies Program, Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, Copernicus Center for Polish Studies, Frankel Center for Judaic Studies